Náttúrufræðingurinn

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Náttúrufræðingurinn - 1992, Qupperneq 72

Náttúrufræðingurinn - 1992, Qupperneq 72
A total of 14 species of diurnal raptors are known as vagrants. Following general information on life history traits all rec- ords up to 31 December 1980 are listed. Records for 1981-89 have been published elsewhere (Gunnlaugur Pétursson & Kristinn H. Skarphéðinsson 1983, Gunn- laugur Pétursson & Erling Ólafsson 1985- 89b, Gunnlaugur Pétursson et al. 1991, 1992, in prep.). The information for each record are: site, date, number of birds (if more than one), sex and age (if known), catalog number (RM-no) at the Icelandic Museum of Natural History (IMNH) if a specimen exists, name of observer or ref- erence, if the record has been published previously. 1. Honey Buzzard (Pernis apivorus). Three records: adult June 1941, October 1979/1980, and September 1988. 2. Black Kite (Milvus migrans). One record: immature male October 1982. 3. Marsh Harrier (Circus aeruginosus). One sight record: immature Septem- ber 1944. 4. Hen Harrier (Circus cyaneus). Six records: immature male November 1946, female October 1957, adult male May 1974, female/immature No- vember 1980, adult male October 1982, and immature male November 1985. 5. Montagu’s Harrier (Circus pygargus). Two records: adult female spring 1967, and adult male December 1982. Circus sp. Five sight records of Circus sp., most of them identified by ob- servers as Hen Harriers: two adult males June 1966, the others were sin- gle females/immatures, two from October (1978 and 1986), and two wintering birds, one 1979-80 (Octo- ber-March), and one 1980-81 (Janu- ary). 6. Sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus). Three records: October 1950 (two together including a immature male), April 1987, and adult female October 1988. 7. Buzzard (Buteo buteo). One record: June 1982. 8. Rough-legged Buzzard (Buteo lagop- us). Twelve records: one undated (im- mature male), four from spring (April-May, including two adult fe- males, and one unsexed immature), one adult male found dead in June, and six records from autumn (Sep- tember-November, including three immatures). The specimen RM7865 belongs to the nearctic race B.l. sanc- tijohannis. 9. Booted Eagle (Hieraaetus pennatus). One record: immature male October 1974. 10. Osprey (Pandion haliaetus). The sec- ond most common raptor vagrant in Iceland, with 14 records. Geograph- ical distribution of the records is shown in Fig. 4. Five records are from spring (April-May), three from sum- mer (June-July) and six from autumn (September-November). AU speci- mens in the IMNH belong to the nominate race P.h. haliaetus, and probably most of the birds come from Northwest-Europe as sustained by two recoveries (one from Sweden and one from Scotland). European Os- preys stay the first two years on their wintering grounds in Africa, and do not return to their northern breeding grounds until two years old (Österlöf 1977). It is interesting to note that the two spring recoveries are two year old birds. Three autumn specimens are immatures. Three summer records show that Ospreys sometimes stay the summer in Iceland, and make exten- sive journeys within the country, as the bird (no. 10) released in Reykja- vik and recovered three weeks later in North-Iceland exemplifies. 11. Kestrel (Falco tinnunculus). The most common raptor vagrant in Iceland, with a total of 46 records. Most of the records, 13 from spring (22 March-27 May) and 29 from autumn (10 August - 21 October), coincide with the spring and fall migration periods of the Kestrel in North-Europe. Three records are from summer 214
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